Loading…

Exploring different aspects of emotion understanding in adults with Down Syndrome

•Language, non-verbal reasoning (NVR) and working memory (WM) are related to emotion understanding skills.•Some aspects of emotion understanding remain unexplored in the adult population with Down Syndrome (DS).•Adults with DS and neurotypical children completed the Test of Emotion Comprehension.•Ad...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Research in developmental disabilities 2021-07, Vol.114, p.103962-103962, Article 103962
Main Authors: Andrés-Roqueta, Clara, Soria-Izquierdo, Eloy, Górriz-Plumed, Ana Belén
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•Language, non-verbal reasoning (NVR) and working memory (WM) are related to emotion understanding skills.•Some aspects of emotion understanding remain unexplored in the adult population with Down Syndrome (DS).•Adults with DS and neurotypical children completed the Test of Emotion Comprehension.•Adults with DS showed lower emotion understanding and a different pattern of errors.•Language, WM and NVR predicted different aspects of emotion understanding. Adults with Down Syndrome (DS) present difficulties in emotion understanding, although research has mainly focused on emotion recognition (external aspects), and little is known about their performance in other complex components (mental and reflective aspects). This study aims to examine different aspects of emotion understanding in adults with DS, including a codification of their error pattern, and also to determine the association with other variables that are commonly impaired in adults with DS. Twenty-two adults with DS and twenty-two children with typical development (TD) matched for vocabulary level were assessed with the Test of Emotion Comprehension (TEC), along with other non-verbal reasoning (NVR), structural language and working memory (WM) tasks. Adults with DS showed lower emotion competence than children with TD in different components of the TEC, and also a different pattern of errors was observed. Structural language, NVR and WM predicted distinct emotion understanding skills in different ways. It is important to plan interventions aimed at improving particular aspects of emotion understanding skills for adults with DS, taking into account the different components, the type of error and the different cognitive and linguistic skills involved in each emotion understanding skill.
ISSN:0891-4222
1873-3379
DOI:10.1016/j.ridd.2021.103962